Dog owner Joan Danzansky loves her golden retriever Biscuit, but it wasn't until after a friend's suggestion to certify a dog she had previously owned as a therapy dog that she realized how much she enjoys watching the love and attention others give to Biscuit as well.

Stress is consistently ranked as "the number-one impediment to academic success," for students across the country, said Sarah Wilson, the health and wellness coordinator at the University Health Center.

To help reduce stress, the health center is partnering with the organization People. Animals. Love. to bring therapy dogs to the University of Maryland for Wags for Wellness, a new program held at the health center on the last Monday of every month.

Students had the opportunity to play with therapy dogs at the Health Center on Monday, March 28, 2016 (Tom Hausman/The Diamondback).

"I love the young students and [Biscuit] likes it, too. I like it when people like her," Danzansky, a PAL certified dog handler, said. "I do a lot of training and work with her, so I love when she is appreciated, too."

Wilson said she hopes Wags for Wellness will help students relieve stress in a unique way, and therapy dogs seemed to be a great solution to the problem because of the attention and love they provide.

"Students are able to come in and play with the dogs, love with the dogs and just be there and feel that comfort and support," she said.

The program, which began this semester, is not the only event on the campus where therapy dogs are used for stress relief — however, it is the first program committed to bringing the dogs on a monthly basis, Wilson said.

Students play with therapy dogs that are owned and trained by volunteers who certify their dogs with the PAL program, according to PAL's website. These dogs must be obedient, nonaggressive, friendly and calm in a variety of environments, such as hospitals and college campuses, Danzansky said.

Students pet one of the dogs at the Wags for Wellness program on Monday, March 28, 2016 (Tom Hausman/The Diamondback).

People are often stressed in a variety of ways and by different things, meaning they also handle stress in various ways, Wilson said, which is why the health center tried to find something "a bit different" to provide new ways for students to relax.

"Our campus has so many different offerings for people to deal with their stress, and dogs are a really great way," Wilson said. "Being surrounded by any type of animal, but particularly dogs, really brings this calming and stress-relieving presence to people, and particularly students."

Sophomore Logan Miller, who previously attended Wags for Wellness, said she knew it was "a really good way to reduce stress, especially with anxieties for midterms coming up."

"I think mental health is really important, and this is a perfect way to let loose, have some fun and enjoy some dog loving," the biology major said.

After very little advertising, the health center hosted its first Wags for Wellness event last month, which already attracted many more people than expected, Wilson said.

Shani Kamberi, a junior chemistry major, testifies before the Maryland House of Delegates Ways and Means committee on Thursday Feb. 21, 2019. Kamberi wrote a bill that would mandate organ and tissue donation education in Maryland public schools for the 2020-21 school year. (Photo by Matthew McDonald/For The Diamondback)